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"That's dead easy," the boss replied. "I'll take you along in the hand car. I've been expecting you, Mr. Quest, some time ago."
"How's that?" the criminologist asked.
Mr. Horan expelled a fragment of chewing tobacco and held out his hand for the cigar which Quest was offering.
"They've been going the wrong way to work, these New York police," he declared. "Just because there was a train on the other track moving slowly, they got it into their heads that Macdougal had boarded it and was back in New York somewhere. That ain't my theory. If I were looking for James Macdougal, I'd search the hillsides there. I'll show you what I mean when we get alongside."
"You may be right," Quest admitted. "Anyway, we'll start on the job."
The section boss turned around and whistled. From a little side track two men jumped on to a hand-car, and brought it round to where they were standing. A few yards away, the man who was propelling it--a great red-headed Irishman--suddenly ceased his efforts. Leaning over his pole, he gazed at Quest. A sudden ferocity darkened his coa.r.s.e face. He gripped his mate by the arm.
"See that bloke there?" he asked, pointing at Quest.
"The guy with the linen collar?" the other answered. "I see him."
"That's Quest, the detective," the Irishman went on hoa.r.s.ely. "That's the man who got me five years in the pen, the beast. That's the man I've been looking for. You're my mate, Jim, eh?"
"I guess so," the other grunted. "Are you going to try and do him in?"
"You wait!"
"Now, then, you fellows," Horan shouted. "What are you hanging about there for, Red Gallagher? Bring the carriage up. You fellows can go and have a smoke for an hour. I'm going to take her down the line a bit."
The two men obeyed and disappeared in the direction of the section house.
Quest looked after them curiously.
"That's a big fellow," he remarked. "What did you call him? Red Gallagher?
I seem to have seen him before."
"He was the most troublesome fellow on the line once, although he was the biggest worker," the boss replied. "He got five years in the penitentiary and that seems to have taken the spirit out of him."
"I believe I was in the case," Quest observed carelessly.
"That so! Now then, young ladies," Mr. Horan advised, "hold tight, and here goes!"
They ambled down the line for about half a mile. Then Horan brought them to a standstill.
"This is the spot," he declared. "Now, if you want my impressions, you are welcome to them. All the search has been made on the right-hand side here, and in New York. I've had my eye on that hill for a long time. My impression is that he hid there."
"I'll take your advice," Quest decided. "We'll spread out and take a little exercise in hill climbing."
"Good luck to you!" the boss exclaimed. "You'll excuse my waiting? It ain't a quarter of a mile back by the road, and I'm going a bit farther on, inspecting."
Quest slipped something into his hand and the little party left the track, crossed the road, scrambled down a bank and spread out. In front of them was a slope some hundreds of feet high, closely overgrown with dwarf trees and mountain shrubs. It was waste land, uncultivated and uninhabited.
Quest made a careful search of the shrubs and ground close to the spot which Horan had indicated. He pointed out to his two companions the spot where the gra.s.s was beaten down, and a few yards farther off where a twig had been broken off from some overhanging trees, as though a man had pushed his way through.
"This may have been done by the police search," he remarked, "or it may not. Don't spread out too far, girls, and go slowly. If we find any trace of James Macdougal on this hill-side, we are going to find it within fifty yards of this spot."
They searched carefully and deliberately for more than half an hour. Then Lenora suddenly called out. They looked around to find only her head visible. She scrambled up, muddy and with wet leaves clinging to her skirt.
"Say, that guy of a section boss told me to look out for caves. I've been in one, sure enough! Just saved myself."
They hurried to where she was. Quest peered into the declivity down which she had slipped. Suddenly he gave vent to a little exclamation. At the same time Laura called out. An inch or two of tweed was clearly visible through the strewn leaves. Quest, flat on his stomach, crawled a little way down, took out his electric torch from his pocket and brushed the stuff away. Then he clambered to his feet.
"Our search is over," he declared gravely, "and your troubles, Lenora.
That is Macdougal's body. He may have slipped in as you did, Laura, or he may have crept there to hide, and starved. Anyhow, it is he."
Lenora's face sank into her hands for a moment. Quest stood on one side while Laura pa.s.sed her arm around the other girl's waist. Presently he returned.
"We can do no more," he pointed out; "we must send for help to bring the body up."
"I shall stay here, please," Lenora begged. "Don't think I'm foolish, please. I can't pretend I am sorry, but I'll stay till some one comes and takes--it away."
"She is quite right," Laura declared, "and I will stay with her."
Quest glanced at his watch.
"That's all right," he declared. "I'll have to get, but I'll send some one along. Cheer up, Lenora," he added kindly. "Look after her, Laura."
"You bet!" that young woman declared brusquely.
Quest hastened along the road to the spot where he had left the car. The chauffeur, who saw him coming, started up and climbed to his seat. Quest took his place.
"Drive to the office," he ordered.
The man slipped in his clutch. They were in the act of gliding off when there was a tremendous report. They stopped short. The man jumped down and looked at the back tire.
"Blow-out," he remarked laconically.
Quest frowned.
"How long will it take?"
"Four minutes," the man replied. "I've got another wheel ready. That's the queerest blow-out I ever saw, though."
The two men leaned over the tire. Suddenly Quest's expression changed. His hand stole into his hip pocket.
"Tom," he explained, "that wasn't a blow-out at all. Look here!"
He pointed to the small level hole. Almost at once he stood back and the suns.h.i.+ne flashed upon the revolver clutched in his right hand.
"That was a bullet," he continued. "Some one fired at that tire. Tom, there's trouble about."
The man looked nervously around.
"That's a rifle bullet, sure," he muttered.
The car was drawn up by the side of the road, a few yards past the section house. A little way farther up was the tool shed, and beyond, the tower house. There was no one in sight at either of these places. On the other side of the road were clumps of bushes, any one of which would prove sufficient for a man in hiding.